Unionists and loyalists angered by the removal of the British Union Jack
flag above Belfast City Hall are increasingly turning to violence and
threats as their protests fail to deliver any progress.

A loyalist riot in east Belfast last night [Thursday night] has
infuriated the PSNI after a number of its members were injured. The
UVF-planned violence also saw attacks against a nearby nationalist
enclave

Road blockings have also resumed, although on a lesser scale to those
seen prior to the Christmas and New Year period. Meanwhile, acts of
sectarian violence and murder are being openly discussed by loyalists in
public internet forums.

The focus of the anger remains the cross-community Alliance Party, which
holds the balance of power at Belfast City Hall and who backed the
recent decision to reduce the number of days the Union flag flies above
the city centre building. But the attentions of loyalist thugs are
increasingly turning against nationalists.

One loyalist web page openly carried calls to “shoot a few taigs
[Catholics]”.

On another page entitled ‘Loyalists Peaceful Protest Updater’ one
individual spoke of shooting Catholics and planting pipe bombs. Another
contributor called for the main Alliance Party office in east Belfast to
be “smashed up”.

Commentators have pointed to strong evidence of orchestration by
unionist paramilitaries, possibly in collusion with elements in
mainstream unionism.

The unionist community now appears increasingly polarised, with many
working-class unionists expressing extremist views and speaking of
coming under a nationalist ‘siege’. The apparent ambivalence of the
mainstream unionist parties, the DUP and UUP, is fuelling concerns of a
potential return to serious loyalist violence.

PSNI BLAME UVF

Last night saw the first serious riot since mid-December, when a mob of
up to a 100 engaged in clashes with nationalists from the Short Strand
area in east Belfast.

Bricks and petrol bombs were thrown at nationalist homes on
Mountpottinger Road, and loyalists later clashed with the PSNI police
at Templemore Avenue. Police spokesmen later pointed to the stashes of
petrol bombs and the use of wheelie-bins filled with missiles.

“We had members of the UVF who were engaged in attacks on police...
There’s absolutely no doubt this violence was orchestrated by the UVF,”
said the chairman of the Police Federation, Terry Spence.

There was also traffic disruption in south Belfast for a time during a
loyalist protest on the Upper Malone Road in Belfast, and on Wednesday,
in Carrickfergus, County Antrim. Other protests were due to take place
this evening.

While the main focus for the flag protestors is a rally set for Belfast
city centre tomorrow [Saturday], plans are also under way for some 150
loyalists to stage a protest outside the Dublin parliament.

The group will ask “sarcastically” for the Irish flag to be taken down,
according to reports.

Organiser Willie Frazer said that three busloads of protesters will make
the journey for the hour-long protest outside Leinster House. Frazer was
previously behind the disastrous 2006 ‘Love Ulster’ parade through
Dublin city centre, when loyalists attempted to hold a sectarian march
down O’Connell street. The event provoked one of Dublin’s most serious
riots in decades.

“I would be very offended if I was living in Ireland [sic] and someone
came and asked me to take the flag down,” Frazer explained. “That’s
exactly how we feel in Belfast.”

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